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From saluting America's military veterans to celebrating the national math champion, Raytheon's 2012 Corporate Responsibility program focused on empowering today's armed services personnel and tomorrow's innovators.
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Designed with virtual reality tools and outfitted with robotic vehicles, Raytheon's Huntsville, Ala. plant will play a key role in international missile defense.
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Royal Air Force crews using Sentinels and Raytheon's powerful processing tools were able to pull important information from aerial images during the uprising against Libyan leader Moammar Ghadafi in 2011.
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From the tip of its nose cone to the base of its radar, designers have invested more than $400 million into Patriot in the last four years as part of a massive program aimed at making the legendary air and missile defense system faster, smarter and tougher.
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With a rainbow-colored rack of toy dart guns on the wall, a foosball table in the break room and a dress code of T-shirts and jeans, SI Government Solutions looks more like a Silicon Valley startup than part of a big defense company.
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When Robert Curbeam was a kid, he spent hours designing airplanes and rockets: sketching out the fins, coloring in the flames and pondering the sweep of each hand-drawn wing. But actually flying into space? That dream came later for this veteran.
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Raytheon's VIIRS sensor system makes history as NASA unveils new Black Marble images - three unique views of Earth at night.
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Raytheon's leaders have been crisscrossing the globe in recent years as foreign sales have become an ever-larger slice of business. Learn about the company's international strategy.
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Ninety years ago, the founders of a high-tech startup used chalk and string to trace the dimensions of their first lab – setting Raytheon on a historic course of continual renewal inspired by customer focus, strong values, and excellence in technology and innovation.
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On today’s battlefield, the best sensors are increasingly marking the difference between defeating the enemy and making a deadly mistake. Raytheon engineers have been working to make those sensors lighter, faster, tougher and more effective.
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Unmanned aircraft seem to get all the headlines these days. But the ship- and submarine-launched Tomahawk cruise missile — an unmanned aircraft that goes on a one-way trip — is quietly upping its game.
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These “old crows” are charged with an important mission: to keep troops safe through electronic warfare technology.
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Email inventor Ray Tomlinson recounts the day in 1971 when he sent the first email using ARPANET, the predecessor of the Internet. That message was the first to use the @ symbol in an email address. In 2012 Tomlinson was inducted into the Internet Society's Internet Hall of Fame.
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Now a Raytheon employee, Derek Duplisea recounts the suicide bombing that changed his life.
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Sixty years ago, television was taking the nation by storm. Microwaves were popping up in kitchens. Computers were beginning to change the world. And on Wall Street, Raytheon, the company at the center of all this technological change, was joining the New York Stock Exchange.
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